Defying Religion(SBL) - SocAMR

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Defying “Religion”: Roman Challenges to Modern Conceptual Constructs
Jeffrey Brodd, California State University, Sacramento
International Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature
Rome, July 1, 2009
Karl Galinsky’s paper “The Cult of the Roman Emperor: Uniter or Divider?” (presented
last November in Boston at the Annual Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature) provides us
with a wealth of observations and ideas, and a road map for ongoing study of the imperial cult.
Of course, Karl has contributed well beyond his 2008 paper, through his diverse and always
compelling studies, and through his leadership of the NEH seminar “Roman Religion in Its
Cultural Context.” At the risk of confusing first- and second-order categories of analysis, I think
it safe to say that Karl has helped to establish in many, to draw from Clifford Geertz, “powerful,
pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations” with regards to the study of ancient Roman
religion.
Here I wish to integrate ideas in Karl’s paper, and in the fine response papers that also
were presented in Boston, with an analysis of issues pertinent to defining “religion.” I hope to
shed light on some basic questions [raised in the companion paper I delivered at the SAMR
conference a few days ago]. What would an optimal definition of religion look like? How does
study of the imperial cult relate to this definitional challenge? How might such study be
enhanced by the sorts of analytic tools called for by Fitz John Porter Poole – “family
resemblances, polythetic categories, metaphoric constructions, and analogic mappings”?1
To begin with, we consider a potent example of “defying ‘religion’” – potent in part due
to its being drawn from a book that for good reason is regarded as a standard authority. Mary
----------------------------------Fitz John Porter Poole, “Metaphors and Maps: Towards Comparison in the Anthropology of Religion,” Journal of
the American Academy of Religion 54, no. 3 (Autumn 1986): 436.
1
2
Beard, John North, and Simon Price note in the Preface of their Religions of Rome, Volume I: A
History that they have chosen “not to provide any formal definition of ‘religion’...in the book...”
They go on to elaborate, “We have not worked with a single definition of religion in mind; we
have worked rather to understand what might count as ‘religion’ in Rome and how that might
make a difference to our own understanding of our own religious world.”2
A few brave souls have provided potent counterexamples. This from the opening page of
the “Religion” chapter in Karl Galinsky’s Augustan Culture:
Religion can be defined in various ways. In the Roman context, we have to be especially
careful not to transpose later and Christian notions of what constitutes belief and faith to
a system that was sui generis. But even when we use the most general definitions, it is
clear that religion had to be an integral aspect of the restabilization of the Roman state
and empire at the time. Fundamentally, religion is a response and alternative to chaos
[reference to Geertz, “Religion As a Cultural System”]; it is an attempt to provide
structure, order, and meaning, the very efforts that lay at the heart of the Augustan
reconstitution of the res publica.3
Much is stated in this passage; to some extent, it provides its own kind of road map for my paper.
To get right to the heart of the matter, though, we note that the closing sentence, which
incorporates a bibliographic reference to Geertz’s essay “Religion As a Cultural System,” boldly
asserts something about the function of religion. By comparison, Beard, North, and Price not
only refrain from providing “any formal definition,” but they also reveal that they “have not
worked with a single definition of religion in mind...”
As my ensuing analysis will make clear, I tend to side with a more assertive approach to
definition, as offered in Karl’s chapter. But it’s important that we be realistic about context and
----------------------------------2
Mary Beard, John North, and Simon Price, Religions of Rome, Volume 1: A History (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1998), x-xi.
3
Karl Galinsky, Augustan Culture (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), 288.
3
purpose. Religions of Rome is a survey – albeit a very impressively thorough and detailed survey
– that encompasses some one thousand years of cultural history. The “Religion” chapter in
Augustan Culture is, naturally, confined mainly to the first half-century of the imperial period.
Such a relatively specific time span accommodates greater conceptual specificity. Given the
scope of Religions of Rome, Beard, North, and Price sensibly favor an “open textured” approach
(a term they have drawn from Poole’s article4). This is not to say that I fully commend their act
of “defying ‘religion’” – as my ensuing analysis also should make clear.
In hopes of providing a useful framework for approaching the definitional question, I
offer the following three arguments.
(1) A sound study of religion demands as much conceptual clarity as possible. The most
effective means of achieving “conceptual clarity” is through definition, broadly understood. In
the words of Melford Spiro, whose definition of religion we shall consider shortly, “It is
obvious...that while a definition cannot take the place of inquiry, in the absence of definitions
there can be no inquiry – for it is the definition...which designates the phenomenon to be
investigated.”5
(2) Inquiry into a culture in order to study its religious aspects should be undertaken with
the conceptual clarity that a definition affords. This implies that we, not (in our case) the ancient
Romans, determine what is meant by and included within this category. Otherwise, the “tail
wags the dog.” (This implies, among other things, that we ought not be overly influenced by the
ancient concept religio, which is the etymological source of our modern word but is not
necessarily semantically correlative.) This said, the inquiry must also be undertaken freely and
with empathy towards the subjects. Such freedom and empathy might well cause us to question
----------------------------------Fitz John Porter Poole, “Metaphors and Maps: Towards Comparison in the Anthropology of Religion,” Journal of
the American Academy of Religion 54, no. 3 (Autumn 1986): 428, 429, 431.
5
Melford E. Spiro, “Religion: Problems of Definition and Explanation,” in Anthropological Approaches to the Study
of Religion, ed. Michael Banton (London: Tavistock, 1966), 90.
4
4
the conceptual constructs with which we embarked in the first place. This brings us to my third
argument.
(3) In dialectical fashion, the inquiry should continue to inform the pursuit of conceptual
clarity. In the words of Beard, North, and Price, we must strive to understand how “what might
count as ‘religion’ in Rome” “might make a difference to our own understanding of our own
religious world.” Embarking upon a study with conceptual clarity should not be accompanied
with resolve to maintain stubbornly any given conceptual perspective. As Siegfried Nadel has
observed, theory and data are inextricably linked.6 Failure to acknowledge this can result in
great damage, while great advantages can be gained through tending to the nature of their
interplay.
Steve Friesen, in his response to Karl’s paper, on one hand sides with this call for
conceptual assertiveness, while also offering important cautionary points:
...in our study of imperial cults, let us be more systematic in our use of theories about the
character of religion. I want to make clear that I am not advocating a search for the right
theory that will give us the right interpretation of imperial cults. On the contrary, I think
we need a lot of disciplined analysis from many points of view.7
These emphases on “disciplined analysis” and “many points of view” are highly apt. So too is
the cautionary stance with regard to the intended effects of a “right theory.”
This brings us to the important article by Fitz John Porter Poole, “Metaphors and Maps:
Towards Comparison in the Anthropology of Religion,” published in the Journal of the of the
American Academy of Religion in 1986 (and declared by Jonathan Z. Smith fourteen years later
to be “the most suggestive article on comparison of the past two decades.”8) Beard, North, and
----------------------------------6
S. F. Nadel, The Foundations of Social Anthropology (Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1951), 20–34 Cited by Poole, 418.
Steve Friesen, “Normal Religion, or, Words Fail Us: A Response to Karl Galinsky’s ‘The Cult of the Roman
Emperor: Uniter or Divider?’” (Boston, 2008), 3–4, Http://socamr.wikispaces.com/.
8
Jonathan Z. Smith, “The ‘End’ of Comparison: Redescription and Rectification,” in A Magic Still Dwells:
Comparative Religion in the Postmodern Age, ed. Kimberley Patton (Berkeley: The University of California Press,
2000), 237.
7
5
Price have done students of Roman religion a great service by referencing this article. In my
opinion, however, their dismissal of the definitional task is not true to the gist of Poole’s
perspective, which amounts to an impassioned plea for rigorous and sophisticated theorizing. In
his words, “I have implied all along that I am concerned to promote the position in the academic
study of religion that both local understandings and broad abstractions must be anchored to
matters of theory if they are to be meaningful, and that description and interpretation are
necessary but not sufficient unless they are anchored to explanation, which implicates theory and
method.”9
I hasten to add that Poole does not insist on the employment of definition per se as the
only means of such anchoring; he refers on occasion, for instance, to “definition or
classification”10 as sound means. But he doesn’t at all argue against the use of definition in
general. His main complaint is leveled at “the monothetic, substantive, and phenomenal
definition of religion”11 as being too rigid to allow for effective interpretation of data, and as
being too narrow to encompass adequately the variety of phenomena that ought to be included in
the category. By way of describing healthy alternatives to monothetic definitions, Poole draws
upon Ludwig Wittgenstein’s notion of “family resemblance,” and then proceeds to advocate
various interrelated analytic tools: “polythetic categories, metaphoric constructions, and analogic
mappings.”12 All of this for sake of facilitating comparison: “The metaphoric or analytic
character of theoretical models is critically important for understanding key facets of
comparative analysis.” Poole at this point cites in a footnote thirty-two(!) works “on the
complex role of metaphor and analogy in analysis.” He then offers his own summary
----------------------------------Poole, “Metaphors and Maps: Towards Comparison in the Anthropology of Religion,” 439.
Ibid., 416, 438.
11
Ibid., 425.
12
Ibid., 441.
9
10
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explanation: “Analytic models that exhibit metaphoric or analogic structure invoke a comparison
by delimiting the focus of analysis to the comprehension of one entity in terms of another...”13
Poole devotes much of the article to identifying and summarizing various exemplars of
such analytic models: Geertz’s Islam Observed and other studies, E. E. Evans-Pritchard’s
“explication of the Nuer concept of kwoth,” Smith’s “Sacred Persistence: Toward a
Redescription of Canon,” to name just a few.14 I suggest, however, that we have closer to home
some fine examples of “metaphoric constructions” and “analogic mappings” – or at least, of
maps to mappings. I refer to various ideas brought forth in the papers of Karl Galinsky and his
respondents. For example, he shows how the notion sōtēr affords a provocative centerpiece for
isolating and comparing elements of the imperial cult and a range of other phenomena.15
Elsewhere in his paper, the beginnings are in place for an interesting “analogic mapping”
between pagan and Christian manifestations of the imperial cult; in one sentence alone he alludes
to variations in sacrifices and divus/sanctus appellation, and to persistence in the artistic
presentation of adventus.16 All of this is very suggestive, and in keeping with the sort of
comparative approach that Poole advocates.
And the list goes on, in Karl’s paper and in those of his respondents. Barbette Spaeth, in
the course of her analysis of the imperial cult at Corinth, addresses the “role of women in the
imperial cult” in a manner that exhibits an array of enticing points of comparison, especially vis-
----------------------------------13
Ibid., 420. Jonathan Smith offers a summary of resemblance theory that is helpful in this regard. Properly
expressed comparative statements include “x resembles y more than z with respect to...” and “x resembles y more
than w resembles z with respect to...” Smith continues, “That is to say, the statement of comparison is never dyadic,
but always triadic; there is always an implicit ‘more than’, and there is always a ‘with respect to’. In the case of an
academic comparison, the ‘with respect to’ is most frequently the scholar’s interest, be this expressed in a question,
a theory, or a model – recalling, in the case of the latter, that a model is useful precisely when it is different from that
to which it is being applied.” Drudgery Divine: On the Comparison of Early Christianities and the Religions of
Late Antiquity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990), 51.
14
Ibid., 419–438.
15
Karl Galinsky, “The Cult of the Roman Emperor: Uniter or Divider?” (Boston, 2008), 7,
Http://socamr.wikispaces.com/.
16
Ibid., 18.
7
à-vis the role of the emperor.17 Robin Jensen, through her astute analysis of a single fourthcentury “Passion Sarcophagus,” produces a fruitful comparison of Christ to the “earthly
emperor” and illustrates widely divergent manifestations of “victory and rule.”18 James Hanges,
addressing the phenomenon of “negotiation” and in reference to evidence ranging from
“Euripides’ Bakchai (circa 406 BCE) to the ‘Delian Aretalogy of Sarapis’” finds “a consistent
theme; migrating gods miraculously defend their worshipers against local opposition, silencing
the rulers of this world...”19 This “consistent theme” is an inviting model for “analogic
mapping.” Steve Friesen draws up the vivid metaphor of “Mission Accomplished” George Bush
and “Obama in Berlin,” and ventures that in “these two figures, seen together in binocular
fashion, we can perhaps begin to imagine the consumption of Roman imperial cults.”20 His
book, Imperial Cults and the Apocalypse of John: Reading Revelation in the Ruins, effectively
draws from Edward Said the musical metaphor of “counterpoint” (reminiscent of Claude LéviStrauss’ “musical metaphors” that Poole enthusiastically approves21), and incorporates a
definitional approach adapted from Lawrence Sullivan’s morphology of the mythic
consciousness.22
The abstract of this paper, and the companion paper that I’ve presented previously, make
mention of five specific features of Roman culture typically deemed to be “religious” (e.g. by
Religions of Rome and other such works23). I suggest that these, too, hold potential for helping to
set up analytic models useful for the study of the imperial cult. Three seem particularly suitable.
----------------------------------Barbette Stanley Spaeth, “Imperial Cult in Roman Corinth: A Response to ‘The Cult of the Roman Emperor:
Uniter or Divider’ by Karl Galinsky” (Boston, 2008), 5–7, Http://socamr.wikispaces.com/. Points include general
nomenclature, the figure of sōtēr/sōteira, and means of identification with deities.
18
Robin M. Jensen, “The Emperor as Christ or Christ as Emperor? Response to Karl Galinsky” (Boston, 2008), 4–5,
Http://socamr.wikispaces.com/.
19
James Constantine Hanges, “To Complicate Encounters: Response to Professor Karl Galinsky” (Boston, 2008), 3,
Http://socamr.wikispaces.com/.
20
Friesen, “Normal Religion, or, Words Fail Us: A Response to Karl Galinsky’s ‘The Cult of the Roman Emperor:
Uniter or Divider?’,” 2–3.
21
Poole, “Metaphors and Maps: Towards Comparison in the Anthropology of Religion,” 435.
22
Steven J. Friesen, Imperial Cults and the Apocalypse of John: Reading Revelation in the Ruins (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2001), esp. 12–15 and 19–21.
23
See for example Valerie M. Warrior, Roman Religion: A Sourcebook, The Focus Classical Sources (Newburyport,
MA: Focus Publishing, R. Pullins & Company, 2002), 7–13.
17
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1. Do ut des.
Analogic mapping between this attitude as it is manifested in the worship of the
traditional deities, on one hand, and of emperors and empresses, deceased and living, on the
other, would assist in exploring such elements as “honorific” devotion and the charismatic aspect
of the imperial cult.
3. The multiplicity and moral ambivalence of divine forces.
The place of the emperor (et al.) within the Roman pantheon is of course itself a rich
topic that invites various forms of sound analytic approach. Isolating the issue of moral
ambivalence seems a fruitful means of exploring the ethical implications of the imperial cult –
both in terms of the relatively moral nature (Caligula and his ilk notwithstanding) of the emperor
vis-à-vis the traditional deities, and of the moralizing effects of the imperial cult.
5. Emphasis on material needs and interconnectedness with politics.
I generally agree that we are ill-served to insist on the separation of religion and politics –
but only at the level of first-order analysis; that is, within the culture that we study. As a secondorder conceptual construct, “the political” has potential as a useful centerpiece for an analogic
mapping between the imperial cult and other aspects of Roman religion. The same goes for
focus on the fulfillment of material needs. Isolating such specific functions facilitates a clearer
approach to comparative study.
Turning now to the question of definition per se, how do definitions relate to the
approach advocated by Poole, and what would a sound definition of religion look like? In
answer to the second question, some ‘ground rules’ based on principles of logic have helpfully
been set forth. Hans Penner and Edward Yonan, for example, following Irving Copi, cite five
main “purposes” of definitions: “(1) to increase vocabulary, (2) to eliminate ambiguity, (3) to
9
clarify meaning, (4) to explain theoretically, and (5) to influence attitudes. Penner and Yonan
then cite basic rules regarding the relation of the definiens to the definiendum.24 Rather than
getting too slowed down here with the specifics, however, it will be helpful to examine a
definition that is looked upon favorably by Penner and Yonan and many other theorists; this
from Melford Spiro:
…I shall define “religion” as an “institution consisting of culturally patterned interaction
with culturally postulated superhuman beings.”25
Poole praises Spiro’s definition. Its relatively open-ended nature efficaciously facilitates rather
than hinders Poole’s “analytic metaphors and sophisticated analogic mappings.”26 In other
words, he finds the definition useful, and this is a vital criterion by which to judge definitions of
religion. In the words of Peter Berger, himself an extraordinary contributor to “disciplined
analysis” and the pursuit of conceptual clarity, “a definition is not more or less true, only more or
less useful.”27
Spiro’s definition would seem to be suitably broad in terms of encompassing a wide array
of cultural phenomena, while at the same time restricting things to (for lack of a better term)
“religion,” with its reference to “superhuman beings.” This is an especially intriguing element
for studying the imperial cult. It is worth our while to consider Spiro’s clarification of
“superhuman beings”:
These refer to any beings believed to possess power greater than man, who can work
good and/or evil on man, and whose relationships with man can, to some degree, be
influenced by...[this from an earlier section] activities which are believed to carry out,
embody, or to be consistent with the will or desire of [the] superhuman beings...[and]
----------------------------------Hans H. Penner and Edward A. Yonan, “Is a Science of Religion Possible?” The Journal of Religion 52, no. 2
(1972 April 1972): 115.
25
Spiro, “Religion: Problems of Definition and Explanation,” 96.
26
Poole, “Metaphors and Maps: Towards Comparison in the Anthropology of Religion,” 436.
27
Peter L. Berger, The Sacred Canopy: Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion, reprint, 1967 (Garden City,
New York: Anchor, 1969), 175.
24
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activities which are believed to influence [the superhuman beings] to satisfy the needs of
the actors.28
Applying Spiro’s category and definition to questions surrounding the nature of the emperors (et
al.) of the imperial cult has potential for instilling conceptual clarity in a typically murky pool.
Of course, Spiro’s definition can be criticized for being too restrictive, precisely due to its
reference to “superhuman beings.” He anticipates this very charge when discussing at some
length the objection that Theravada Buddhism could be seen, through the lens of this definition,
as not being a religion. His response, in essence, is, So what? In words that get at the heart of
the notion of definitions as “useful,” Spiro asks,
Does the study of religion become any the less significant or fascinating – indeed, it
would be even more fascinating – if in terms of a consensual ostensive definition it were
discovered that one or seven or sixteen societies did not possess religion?29
This is not “letting the tail wag the dog” with a vengeance! This same sort of bold assertion of
the priority of conceptual construct could be applied for any definition. But here again, the
criterion of usefulness must prevail. If a certain definition of religion proves to be overly
limiting or otherwise ineffectual, it needs to be revised or even abandoned.
I’ll conclude with some final considerations of the assertions set forth by Karl Galinsky
in his “Religion” chapter, namely that “religion is a response and alternative to chaos; it is an
attempt to provide structure, order, and meaning...” Characterizing religion in this manner
certainly serves to elucidate its function in “the Augustan reconstitution of the res publica.”30 It
may not be true of all religions; then again, it may be. Generally speaking, theorists today shy
away from functionalist theories of religion, due in large part to their common tendency to lead
----------------------------------Poole, “Metaphors and Maps: Towards Comparison in the Anthropology of Religion,” 97–98.
Melford E. Spiro, “Religion: Problems of Definition and Explanation,” in Anthropological Approaches to the
Study of Religion, ed. Michael Banton (London: Tavistock, 1966), 88.
30
Galinsky, Augustan Culture, 288.
28
29
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to reductionism.31 But I don’t think their potential pitfalls should be overstated. Identifying such
functional aspects of religion can be very useful – and so we’re back on the firmer ground of this
crucial criterion. Furthermore, calling attention to certain functional aspects of religion as they
apply to a particular historical setting seems to me a legitimate approach, so long as these certain
aspects are not imposed in a limiting way on a general definition of religion. Calling attention to
the role of religion in providing “structure, order, and meaning” during the Augustan period is a
help, not a hindrance, to facilitating our understanding of religion in this particular cultural
setting.32
We have come to the end of my allotted time, and so obviously there is not going to be
any grandiose declaration of a “right” definition. The point I wish to emphasize in closing is
this: Engaging in the pursuit of conceptual clarity leads to the enhancement of conceptual clarity,
and therefore to more effective studies. Not to engage at all – to “defy ‘religion’” entirely – gets
us nowhere. It is better to ‘sin boldly’ in this regard, with an open attitude towards repentance of
course, and, through attending to the ongoing interplay of theory and data (and now rather than
quoting Karl I quote with him) make haste slowly.
----------------------------------For example, Nancy Frankenberry and Hans Penner, “Geertz’s Long-Lasting Moods, Motivations, and
Metaphysical Conceptions,” Journal of Religion 79, no. 4 (1999): 629. The authors assert that “functionalism, the
very theory he most relies on in explicating a definition of religion, was bankrupt as a theory before Geertz’s essay
was even written.” Melford Spiro, who insists on “nominal” or “ostensive” versus “real” definitions of religion,
offers specific objections: “Most functionalist definitions of religion are essentially a subclass of real definitions in
which functionalist variables (the promotion of solidarity, and the like) are stipulated as the essential nature of
religion. But whether the essential nature consists of a qualitative variable (such as ‘the sacred’) or a functional
variable (such as social solidarity), it is virtually impossible to set any substantive boundary to religion and, thus, to
distinguish it from other sociocultural phenomena.” Spiro, “Religion: Problems of Definition and Explanation,” 89–
90.
32
For another good example of emphasizing a functionalist aspect of religion to good effect, consider Simon Price’s
assertion that “both [politics and religion] are ways of systematically constructing power.” S.R.R. Price, Rituals and
Power: The Roman Imperial Cult in Asia Minor (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984), 247.
31
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-----. “The ‘End” of Comparison: Redescription and Rectification.” In A Magic Still Dwells:
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13
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MA: Focus Publishing, R. Pullins & Company, 2002.